Additionally, going through photos of the event, only one fan was photographed with a Eagles jersey, by three different photographers.

No other “fans” present appeared to have Eagles jerseys.

AP names the man pictured here as Tim Dagit of Chester Springs, Pennsylvania. Contacted over Facebook, Dagit told Business Insider that he and his group of family and friends had gone to D.C. specifically for the occasion.

While Dagit’s true Eagles fandom checks out, him being the only one in the crowd pictured with a jersey still raises questions about how so many Eagles fans could be in possession of so few jerseys, and this one wasn’t even being worn.

Win McNamee/Getty ImagesWell, alright then.

Dagit said that in person, there was more Eagles representation than we’ve seen in images of the event.

“The people immediately next to our group had ties (more subtle I will say) and were from a close by town to where I went to high school,” Dagit told Business Insider. He added that the invitation for the event specified business attire, which would certainly help explain the lack of more vibrant fandom in the crowd.

Still, a group of more than 1,000 fans with apparently just one jersey and a few Eagles ties amongst them certainly raises eyebrows among us Eagles fans.

While Dagit and the group around him certainly give off the impression of full-fledged Eagles fans, and its not hard to imagine a few amongst the crowd like him that had made the trip from Pennsylvania for the day, the lack of Eagles jerseys still leaves some questions unanswered.

When explaining its decision to disinvite the Eagles, the White House claimed that the Eagles were taking part in a “political stunt” by backing out of the event. But to Eagles die-hards who have grown up surrounded by friends and family that bleed green, this doesn’t look like a crowd of Eagles fans.